If we already saw the keyframes that we need to find,
we do not need to bisect to find them.
This will always be the case for streams with audio only,
where each frame acts as a keyframe, but will occasionally
also happen for streams with video.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=662475
Opus streams outside of Ogg may not have headers, and oggstream
may be used by oggmux to mux an Opus stream which does not come
from Ogg - thus without headers.
Determining headerness by packet count would strip the first two
packets from such an Opus stream, leading to a very small amount
of audio being clipped at the beginning of the stream.
In push mode, we determine duration by doing a seek to the end of the
stream. However, a skeleton stream with an index will cause the duration
to be known already, and we end up never setting the push_time_duration
variable which we use to know duration has been determined.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=662049
The codec setup headers are a lot more likely to have correct information,
especially as it's easy to remux a skeleton in a file where streams don't
have the same parameters (I've even seen a file with two skeletons).
Still, this is useful in the case we have a codec we can't decode, so we
can at least (theoretically) convert granpos to time, so we discard this
information if the codec setup has already provided it.
This fixes playback on (at lesat) the original archive.org encoding of
"The Night of the Living Dead" (now replaced by another encoding).
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=612443
This could happen when testing with navseek, and pressing
right and left at roughly the same time. The current chain
is temporarily moved away, and this caused the flush events
not to be sent to the source pads, which would cause the
data queues downstream to reject incoming data after the
seek, and shut down, wedging the pipeline.
Now, I can't really decide whether this is a nasty steaming
hack or a good fix, but it certainly does fix the issue, and
does not seem to break anything else so far.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=621897
This patch implements seeking in push mode (eg, over the net)
in Ogg, using the double bisection method.
As a side effect, it also fixes duration determination of network
streams, by seeking to the end to check the actual duration.
Known issues:
- Getting an EOS while seeking stops the streaming task, I can't
find a way to prevent this (eg, by issuing a seek in the event
handler).
- Seeking twice in a VERY short succession with playbin2 fails
for streams with subtitles, we end up pushing in a dataqueue
which is flushing. Rare in normal use AFAICT.
- Seeking is slow on slow links - byte ranges guesses could be
made better, decreasing the number of required requests
- If no granule position is found in the last 64 KB of a stream,
duration will be left unknown (should be pretty rare)
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=621897
The first packet of a sparse stream may arrive after an initial
delay in the stream. If ogg_stream_packetout reports a discontinuity
in a sparse stream, do not propagate it to other streams in the
chain unnecessarily.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=621897
If both quality and bitrate are set, libtheora will try to meet
both constraints, causing it to prefer emitting a smaller number
of good frames, to emitting the full number of frames that would
not meet the requested quality. This causes a slideshow effect
when the bitrate is low and the quality is high. And the default
theoraenc is high (48/63).
So only set quality when it is requested, and leave it unset
otherwise.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=658443
After all, we do hope to find actual data for these streams.
However, warn if we could not set up a chain when we find a
non BOS page, as that means we don't have a valid Ogg stream.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=657151